scholarly journals An Exploration Study of the Kagenfels and Natzwiller Granites, Northern Vosges Mountains, France: A Combined Approach of Stream Sediment Geochemistry and Automated Mineralogy

Minerals ◽  
2019 ◽  
Vol 9 (12) ◽  
pp. 750 ◽  
Author(s):  
Benedikt M. Steiner ◽  
Gavyn K. Rollinson ◽  
John M. Condron

Following a regional reconnaissance stream sediment survey that was carried out in the northern Vosges Mountains in 1983, a total of 20 stream sediment samples were collected with the aim of assessing the regional prospectivity for the granite-hosted base and rare metal mineralisation of the northern Vosges magmatic suite near Schirmeck. A particular focus of the investigation was the suspected presence of W, Nb and Ta geochemical occurrences in S-type (Kagenfels) and I-S-type (Natzwiller) granites outlined in public domain data. Multi-element geochemical assays revealed the presence of fault-controlled Sn, W, Nb mineralisation assemblages along the margins of the Natzwiller and Kagenfels granites. Characteristic geochemical fractionation and principal component analysis (PCA) trends along with mineralogical evidence in the form of cassiterite, wolframite, ilmenorutile and columbite phases and muscovite–chlorite–tourmaline hydrothermal alteration association assemblages in stream sediments demonstrate that, in the northern Vosges, S-type and fractionated hybrid I-S-type granites are enriched in incompatible, late-stage magmatic elements. This is attributed to magmatic fractionation and hydrothermal alteration trends and the presence of fluxing elements in late-stage granitic melts. This study shows that the fractionated granite suites in the northern Vosges Mountains contain rare metal mineralisation indicators and therefore represent possible targets for follow-up mineral exploration. The application of automated mineralogy (QEMSCAN®) in regional stream sediment sampling added significant value by linking geochemistry and mineralogy.

1992 ◽  
Vol 155 ◽  
pp. 24-27
Author(s):  
P.W.U Appel

The Bjørnesund Project is aimed at an evaluation of the mineral potential of the southernmost part of the municipality of Nuuk, between Bjørnesund and the large glacier Frederikshåb Isblink. One of the reasons that economic mineral deposits were expected to occur in the Bjørnesund area, was the presence of gold anomalies in heavy mineral concentrates from stream sediments (Appel, 1989). Another reason was the presence of anthophyllite-rich zones, presumed to have formed by hydrothermal alteration. At a fairly late stage in the planning of the field programme, the project was enlarged to include a regional geochemical stream sediment sampling programme in the area between 64°N and Bjørnesund. This latter part of the project was financed by a separate contribution from the Mineral Resources Administration, Ministry of Energy.


2016 ◽  
Vol 66 (3) ◽  
pp. 477-495
Author(s):  
Bogusław Bagiński ◽  
Petras Jokubauskas ◽  
Justyna Domańska-Siuda ◽  
Pavel Kartashov ◽  
Ray Macdonald

Abstract The low-temperature hydrothermal alteration of certain rare-metal minerals is recorded in a quartz-epidote metasomatite from the Tsakhirin Khuduk occurrence in the Khaldzan-Buragtag Nb-REE-Zr deposit, Mongolian Altai. A peralkaline granitic pegmatite was metasomatized by hydrothermal fluids released from associated intrusions, with the formation of, inter alia, chevkinite-(Ce), fergusonite-(Nd) and minerals of the epidote group. The textural pattern indicates recrystallization and coarsening of these phases. Later, low-temperature alteration by fluids resulted in the chevkinite-(Ce) being replaced by complex titanite-TiO2 -cerite-(Ce)-hingganite-hydroxylbastnasite-( Ce) assemblages. Calcite formed late-stage veins and patches. The hydrous fluids were poor in F and CO2 but had high Ca contents.


2013 ◽  
Vol 05 (02) ◽  
pp. 282-290 ◽  
Author(s):  
Victor F. Embui ◽  
Benjamin O. Omang ◽  
Vivian B. Che ◽  
Melvin T. Nforba ◽  
Emmanuel C. Suh

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